babette wehrmann: independent expert danilo antonio: un-habitat exploring the application of the...
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Babette Wehrmann: Independent ExpertDanilo Antonio: UN-HABITAT
EXPLORING THE APPLICATION OF THE VGGT IN URBAN AND
PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMMEGLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMMEGLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
• Introduction: Objectives of the study
• The VGGT in the urban and peri-urban context
• Key land governance issues and actors in urban and peri-urban areas
• Proposals on how to operationalize the VGGT in the urban and peri-urban setting
• Outlook: Recommendations on the way forward
CONTENT
EXPLORING THE APPLICATION OF THE VGGT IN URBAN/PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
Objectives of the study
Introduction
• Explore the VGGT’s potential applications in urban and peri-urban areas focusing on the institutional and operational frameworks underpinning the responsible governance of tenure in these contexts.
• Highlight the particularities of urban and peri-urban tenure governance.
• Present some key instruments and approaches that can help in ensuring responsible governance of tenure in the urban and peri-urban context.
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
The VGGT in the urban and peri-urban context
EXPLORING THE APPLICATION OF THE VGGT IN URBAN/PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
• The VGGT process and outcome from an urban/peri-urban perspective
• How the VGGT can relate to urban and peri-urban areas
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
The VGGT from an urban/peri-urban perspective
THE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
• Consultationsfocussing on land tenure governance in rural, peri-urban and urban areas.
• Negotiationsnew focus on national food security;new dimensions: forest tenure and tenure of fisheries.
• The outcome an unprecedented international soft law instrument in the area of tenure;focussing on the recognition and respect of all legitimate tenure rights holders and their rights;defining responsibilities for States and non-state actors and delineatingprocedural approaches on how this should happen;predominantly focussing on rural development.
• The reactionsDoubts and concerns among stakeholders of the urban sector on theapplicability of the VGGT in urban and peri-urban areas.
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
How the VGGT can relate to urban and peri-urban areas
THE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
• The VGGT’s objectives• The rural-urban nexus• Food supply chains intertwining rural and urban areas• The VGGT’s general principles applied to urban and peri-urban areas• The VGGT’s implementation principles applied to urban and peri-urban areas
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
VGGT’s objectives relevant for urban and peri-urban areas
THE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
• Poverty eradication• Sustainable livelihoods• Housing security / right to adequate housing• Sustainable social and economic development• Environmental protection
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
FOOD SECURITY AND THE RURAL-URBAN CONTINUUM
THE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
Strong and healthy rural areas
Strong and healthy urban areas
functioning linkages
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMMETHE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
Agricultural producer
Financial investors
Seeds industrie
Pesticides industrie
Fertilizer industries
Producers of agricultural machinery and equipment
Raw material suppliers
Final food processor
Food processor
End consumer
Other natural
re-sources such as water
RetailersWholesaler
Energy
LandAgricultural Production
Industrial production
Administration/Management, incl. strategy development, research, logistics, marketing, book keeping etc.
Storage
Sale
Transport
Extension services
Research
Supply with transport
Input w/o transport
Food supply chain linking urban, peri-urban and rural areas
Primarily in urban/peri-urban areas
Partly in urban/peri-urban areas
Occasionally in urban/peri- urban areas
Primarily in rural areas
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMMETHE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
Food production – causing land use changes in urban and peri-urban areas
The critical issue The land tenure governance aspect
Land use changes Conversion of agricultural land
into construction land used for input industry, food processing, food storage or housing for those working in the food sector – from workers to managers, from farmers to bankers
Loss of valuable agricultural land – reducing the total amount of agricultural land and jeopardizing food security
Absence of an integrated urban development strategy;
Lack of adequate land use planning or weak implementation of land use plans;
Questionable ways of issuing building permits;
Transparent process in selection of areas for urban regeneration
Conversion of green areas, forests, protected areas etc. into construction land (as above)
Loss of ecological areas needed to ensure air quality, air circulation, access to water, protection from natural hazards etc. Loss of biodiversity etc.
Conversion of residential land – generally informal settlement – into formally used construction land (as above)
Loss of residential land for the urban poor.
Urban land use changes in existing urban and peri-urban areas
Inappropriate policies and planning.
Urban regeneration Dysfunctional cities
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMMETHE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
Food production – causing changes in land possession/ownership in urban and peri-urban areas
Changes of land possessors/users
Private investors replacing rural and peri-urban farmers who are losing access to their agricultural land
Potential risks:Land grabbing,Deal between investor and customary authority in charge of administering the land – against the interests of the traditional community
No recognition of customary rights;
No recording of customary rights;
Private investors replacing informal settlers
Risk of eviction without adequate compensation
No recognition of informal tenure;
No recording of informal tenure.
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMMETHE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
Food production – changing land tenure systems in urban and peri-urban areas
Changes in tenure systems
Private individual tenure rights based on statutory law replacing collective tenure rights based on customary tenure
Potential risks:Land grabbing,Deal between investor and customary authority in charge of administering the land – against the interests of the traditional community
No recognition of customary rights;
No recording of customary rights;
State ownership based on statutory law replacing collective tenure rights based on customary tenure
Risk of expropriation with inadequate compensation
Lack of national land valuation standards;
Lack of qualified licenced land valuators;
Lack of education/formation for land valuers;
Formal tenure replacing informal tenure
Risk of evicting informal settlers. No recognition of informal tenure;
No recording of informal tenure.
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMMETHE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
Conclusion
Food production in urban and peri-urban areas
Competing demands for economic, social and environmental uses of land.
Changes of land use
Potential negative impacts:•Land use conversions•De-forestation•Water depletion•Soil erosion•Loss of agricultural land•Loss of valuable ecological sites
Need for:Strategic, participatory land use planning for city-regions
Changes in land ownership/possession
Potential negative impacts:•Reduced access to land (used for food production, housing or other basic needs) for the local population•Displacement of the local population
Security of tenure
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
How the VGGT can relate to urban and peri-urban areas
THE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
• The VGGT’s objectives• The rural-urban nexus• Food supply chains intertwining rural and urban areas• The VGGT’s general principles applied to urban and peri-urban areas• The VGGT’s implementation principles applied to urban and peri-urban areas
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
The VGGT’s general principles applied in an urban and peri-urban setting
THE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
• Recognizing, respecting and safeguarding the entire scope of land tenure rights ranging from informal rights with extremely low security to formal rights with high tenure security with the objective of providing tenure security for all without eliminating the existing advantages of informality, such as low land prices and low building standards;• Building on informal and customary ways of recording and administering informal and customary tenure rights that exist in many informal settlements;• Refraining from evicting squatters forcibly and resettling them only where rights to land are required for a public purpose with appropriate compensation. In such a case, States should ensure that the planning and process for expropriation are transparent and participatory and that the compensation is fair and prompt (see VGGT section 16).
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
The VGGT’s implementation principles applied in an urban and peri-urban setting I
THE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
• Recognizing the inherent dignity and the equal and inalienable human rights of informal settlements residents, urban and peri-urban population including those men and women of all ages processing and selling food in the (peri-) urban informal economy, workers in food processing and input producing factories and warehouses – many of them being (illegal) migrant workers, drivers (transporting inputs, food, and workers) and consumers; • Ensuring the equal right of women and men to the enjoyment of all human rights, in particular the right to adequate housing;• Adopting an integrated and sustainable city development strategy/plan recognizing that natural resources and their uses are interconnected and that their protection is crucial to ensure food security and sustainable livelihoods in urban and peri-urban areas;• Ensuring active, free, effective, meaningful and informed participation of all those that may be affected by investments in the food supply chain affecting access to land such as informal settlers, (peri-)urban farmers, street traders/vendors and informal entrepreneurs;
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
The VGGT’s implementation principles applied in an urban and peri-urban setting II
THE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
• Adopting a rules-based approach through laws applicable to all ensuring the recognition and respect of the entire continuum of land rights existing in urban and peri-urban areas and ensuring their equal enforcement and independent adjudication; • Clearly defining and widely publicizing policies, laws and procedures dealing with all relevant aspects of urban land management and administration;• Holding all individuals, public agencies and non-state actors listed in chapter 6 and 8 of the present paper responsible for their actions and decisions according to the principle of the rule of law;• Monitor urban tenure governance in order to improve it continuously.
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
The VGGT’s principles and other instruments
THE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
Above mentioned principles are supposed to be interpreted and applied consistent with existing obligations under national and international law, and with due regard to voluntary commitments under applicable regional and international instruments. •What are those instruments in the context of urban and peri-urban tenure governance? •To what degree do they coincide with the VGGT? •On which aspects do they differ or what additional issues do they tackle? In the following table, some key instruments dealing with urban tenure issues are presented. The main purpose of theis table is to highlight core aspects of the philosophy of the urban tenure community, which can partly be similar with the content of the VGGT and partly differ – sometimes more sometimes less.
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
URBAN TENURE GOVERNANCE ISSUES ADDRESSED BY SELECTED INTERNATIONAL INSTRUMENTS
THE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
Urban tenure governance issue Key international instrument dealing with the issue
The right to adequate housing UN General Assembly (1987): Resolution 42/146 on realization of the right to adequate housing
(Prohibition) of forced evictions Commission on Human Rights: Resolution 2004/28 on prohibition of forced evictions
Security of tenure United Nations: MDG 7/11 on achieving significant improvement in lives of at least 100 million slum dwellers, by 2020 including secure tenure as one key dimension/indicator
1996 Istanbul declaration and the Habitat Agenda UN-Habitat: Global campaign on secure tenure UN-Habitat resolution 23/17 (see below)
Women’s access to and control over land
Sub-Commission on the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights: Resolutions 1997/19 on women and the right to adequate housing and to land and property and 1998/15 on women and the right to land, property and adequate housing
Commission on Human Rights: Resolutions 2000/13, 2001/34, 2002/49, 2003/22, 2005/25: Women’s equal ownership, access to and control over land and the equal rights to own property and to adequate housing
Urban governance UN-Habitat: Global Campaign on urban governance
Equitable access to land / Land governance
Governing Council of the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (2011): Resolution GC23-17 on Sustainable Urban Development through Expanding Equitable Access to Land, Housing, Basic Services and Infrastructure
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
Key land governance issues and actors in urban and peri-urban areas
EXPLORING THE APPLICATION OF THE VGGT IN URBAN/PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
• Areas of weak land governance in urban/peri-urban areas• Consequences of weak land governance in urban/peri-
urban areas• Key tenure governance challenges in urban/peri-urban
areas• Elements of responsible land governance in urban/peri-
urban areas
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
Areas of weak land governance in urban/peri-urban areas
Key land governance issues and actors in urban and peri-urban areas
• Management of public land• Recording tenure rights• Land use planning• Allocation of building permits• Lack of land use inspections• Land valuation• Land related data management
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
Consequences of weak land governance in urban/peri-urban areas
Key land governance issues and actors in urban and peri-urban areas
• Extensive informal urban development with all the problems caused by it such as lack of space for public infrastructure and services, limited local revenues etc. • Dysfunctional cities (e.g. traffic, pollution, inadequate roads and public spaces)• Evictions of informal settlers, farmers, food processors and traders – thereby increasing poverty and compromising local food security• Resettlement without adequate compensation – thereby increasing poverty and compromising local food security• Displacement of the urban poor due to market pressure• Elimination of urban agriculture, mainly for subsistence and the informal economy – thereby increasing poverty and compromising local food security• Loss of green areas• Loss of urban agricultural land• Loss of public space• Blocking air circulation corridors leading to extreme heat and very low air quality in parts of the city – having among others a negative effect on urban agriculture.
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
Key tenure governance challenges in urban/peri-urban areas
Key land governance issues and actors in urban and peri-urban areas
• Legal pluralism in peri-urban tenure• Lack of respect of state institutions (actors and rules) including formal land administration and management institutions• Huge number of informal tenure rights holders• Extremely rapid expansion of build-up areas• Extreme high demand for land leading to shortage of land and rapidly increasing land values• International financial investors in urban areas influencing the land market• Extreme power imbalance
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
Elements of responsible land governance in urban/peri-urban areas
Key land governance issues and actors in urban and peri-urban areas
• Realization of the right to adequate housing • Recognition of informal tenure rights• Anti-evictions regulatory frameworks• Free, prior and informed consent for resettlement• Recognition of customary tenure rights• Improving women’s access to land and natural resources• Transparent and inclusive urban planning• Land readjustment and land sharing and appropriate financial and participatory models• Inclusion of all legitimate tenure rights holders and active, free, effective, meaningful and informed participation• Fair, reliable, gender-sensitive, accessible ways of resolving disputes over tenure rights etc. • Functioning environmental protection such as protection of urban agriculture from natural hazards and sustainable city forest management
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
Relevant actors & institutions: their behaviors, interests & needs
Key land governance issues and actors in urban and peri-urban areas
Actors Behavior Interests Needs
Head of states, ministers and other high ranking politicians – including those at city level
Political corruption such as illegal allocation of state land Reckless enforcement of state interests
Political control Building alliances with other rich and powerful
individuals Access to land and other resources to transfer them
into capital/profit
Power Wealth
Officials working in land administration, e.g. land registration, cadastre, urban planning and construction, housing etc.
Bureaucratic corruption leading to changes in land use plans, irregular allocation of building permits, incorrect valuation of properties etc.
Higher income – often to be able to feed their families
Sufficient income Well-being of their families
Customary authorities
Adherence to and implementation of customary land tenure and administration/management systems
Sometimes: misuse of customary system for their individual profit
Demonstrating power and influence, in particular demonstrating power over the statutory system
Keeping control over land under customary tenure
Respect for / Recognition of their authority Land for their people to live and work on Personnel wealth
Private sector professionals, e.g. surveyors, land valuers, architects, planners, etc.
Fraud in favour of those who pay them for their services Higher income – often to be able to feed their families
Well-being of their families Wealth
Land developers, in particular those acting illegally or informally
Illegal or at least semi-legal development of land Generating profit
Wealth
Food producing, processing, storing, transporting, trading companies
Dealing with public officials to invest in land, often ignoring the interests of the poor; not acting responsibly or simply indifferent
Generating profit Well-being
Employees in the formal food sector such as managers, engineers etc.
Searching for adequate housing – sometimes suffering from weak governance
Finding middle income housing Very good shelter for their families
Workers in the formal food sector Searching for adequate housing – sometimes suffering from weak governance
Finding low income housing Good shelter for their families
Informal food producers, processors and sellers Requiring access to land for producing, processing and selling food in the informal economy
Access to land at low cost Simple shelter for their families
Informal settlers
Settling illegally or informally on public land Not to lose their shelter Respect for human rights
Simple shelter for their families Well-being Justice
Private land owners Selling or renting land at highest possible price giving the land to the highest bidder – not caring for what the land will be used and if this is line with existing regulations. This contributes to squatter farming.
Generating highest possible profit Wealth
Bankers Investing in land to ensure high rates of return or providing loans with high interest rates
Generating sufficient profit to receive high annual bonus
Wealth
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
PROPOSALS ON HOW TO OPERATIONALIZE THE VGGT IN THE URBAN AND PERI-URBAN SETTING
EXPLORING THE APPLICATION OF THE VGGT IN URBAN/PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
• Instruments and approaches to ensure responsible governance of tenure in urban and peri-urban areas
• Roles and responsibilities of key actors
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
The VGGT provide the overarching framework, principles and guidelines under which GLTN and other partners’ tools and methodologies can be applied.
Proposals how to operationalize the VGGT in urban and peri-urban setting
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
Instruments and approaches to ensure responsible governance of tenure in urban and peri-urban areas
Proposals how to operationalize the VGGT in urban and peri-urban setting
• Realization of the continuum of rights• Social Tenure Domain Model• Participatory enumeration as a community led approach for tenure security• Participatory and Inclusive Land Readjustment (PILaR) approaches and land sharing models• Effective strategies to prevent and remedy forced evictions including fair compensation• Urban land use planning and citywide strategic planning
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
Roles and responsibilities of key actors (extract)
Proposals how to operationalize the VGGT in urban and peri-urban setting
Actors according to VGGT
Actors in the urban and peri-urban setting
General responsibilities according to VGGT Specific responsibilities in regard to urban land governance
State Government Ministries responsible
for land administration including cadastre and land registration
Ministries responsible for urban development, housing, urban Planning, infrastructure, transport, economy, trade, etc.
Implementing the VGGT Setting up multi-stakeholder platforms Monitoring and evaluation of the
implementation of the VGGT and its impact on land governance
Ensuring that the national land policy adequately covers urban and peri-urban tenure issues
Establishing or improving relevant laws such as urban planning and construction law
Local governments
Mayor Municipal Council City/municipal
administration
Promoting and implementing the VGGT Developing sufficient human, financial and technical capacity for effective and responsible land management and land administration of urban as well as peri-urban areas
Conducting major campaigns against corruption Abstaining from forced evictions Providing for a wide diversity of forms of land tenure Providing for sufficient housing for all income groups which can
be developed by either the public or the private sector Conducting city wide strategic planning Introducing simple and effective pro-poor land management tools
such as participatory enumerations, land sharing, Social Tenure Domain Model
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
OUTLOOK:
RECOMMENDATIONS ON THE WAY FORWARD
EXPLORING THE APPLICATION OF THE VGGT IN URBAN/PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
GLTN BRIEFING AND PROGRAMME
Recommendations
Outlook: Recommendations on the way forward
• When it comes to the application of the VGGT in urban and peri-urban areas, FAO and UN-Habitat/GLTN and other key partners could create many synergies through collaboration. Through such cooperation, more resources could be made available or would be accessible for the application of the VGGT. • GLTN with its network, tools and influence should facilitate the application of the VGGT. As a network of networks, GLTN should serve as a platform for implementing/applying the VGGT – not only in urban but also in rural areas as many of their members have a focus on rural tenure issues as well – and to reach more countries, organizations and stakeholders. • The potential cooperation cooperation – in coherence with the FAO implementation program – could include activities on:- strengthening knowledge management (i.e. good practices, priority researches, e-learning programs), - awareness raising, - capacity development and - country level support.
EXPLORING THE APPLICATION OF THE VGGT IN URBAN AND PERI-URBAN CONTEXT
NEED TO KNOW MORE?
Babette [email protected]
Danilo [email protected]
www.unhabitat.org / www.gltn.net